Clark was sacked in 2000. In 2004 National Review, that was when it was worth reading, published "An Army of One" about Clark. It had this gem in it:
"Interviews with a wide variety of current and retired military officials reveal that Clark was disliked by only three groups: Those whom ranked above him in the chain of command whom he ignored, his peers at the same rank whom he lied to, and those serving beneath him whom he micromanaged. Other than that, everyone liked him."IIRC, he survived getting sacked earlier because Bill Clinton liked him. During Kosovo and he was noted for having his own press corp following him around and even a few members of Congress complained about it. His Presidential campaign was an embarrassment. His interview for the Advocate didn't help him.
In 2007, he was claiming that in 2003, that right after George W Bush decided to invade Iraq and Afghanistan, an unnamed high ranking general couldn't wait to tell him about it.
Take what he says with a huge grain of salt.
Re: Wesley Clark: Not since Colin Powell had a fawning media pulled out all the stops to catapult an American military officer into the ranks of politicians. Fortunately for the country it didn’t work.